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The Magic Online Championship Series (MOCS) was a tournament series taking place on Magic Online. Each year, 24 players earned invitations via the MOCS to the Magic Online Championship, an event with a $200,000 prize purse as of MOCS 2017 (The Finals itself running in year 2018). For 2020, the MOCS was replaced by the Magic Online Premier Play Program.[1]

History

The MOCS was first introduced in 2009.[2] It contained seven seasons, each with its own season championship event; the winner of each event qualified for the 2009 Magic Online Championship as well as the 2009 Magic World Championships, held concurrently. In order to be qualified for the season championship event, players needed to earn 15 Qualifier Points (QPs) over the course of the season leading up to it. QPs could be earned by doing well in events, such as by winning 8-player drafts of finishing in the top eight of premier events. In addition to the seven MOCS event winners, the 2009 Magic Online Player of the Year qualified for the Magic Online Championship. The Player of the Year title went to the player who earned the most QPs over the course of the seven seasons. In 2009, this player was Shota Yasooka.[3] The eight participants played three rounds each of Classic, Zendikar booster draft, and Standard; the top two players after these nine rounds played a final match, with the format being Standard.[4] Ultimately, these two players would be Shota Yasooka and Anssi Myllymäki, with Myllymäki taking the title and he $13,000 share of the overall $50,000 prize purse.

Over the years since its inception, the MOCS has undergone several changes; the Magic Online Championship was increased to 12 players in 2010, with a $100,000 prize purse,[5] and after the 2012 premier event changes, the MOCS was separated from the World Championship, serving as its own event held each year in Seattle, Washington.[6] The winner qualified for the new 16-man Players Championship (later renamed the World Championship). The first of these events featured 16 players and a $116,000 payout, with the winner being Russia's Dmitriy Butakov.[7] For the 2013 Magic Online Championship (held in 2014), the winner was also awarded Gold status in the Pro Players Club. For the 2015 Magic Online Championship, this was changed to Platinum status. For the 2017 Magic Online Championship, the number of players was increased to 24, with a prize purse of $200,000. However, the winner no longer received a qualification for the World Championship.

For 2020, the revamped Magic Online Premier Play Program was introduced that incorporated both the Players Tour system and MOCS into a single program.[1]

Qualification

In the 2017 season, there are two main ways to qualify for the Championship: By finishing top two in MOCS Playoff Events (the traditional qualifiers that utilizes Qualifier Points (QP)), or winning in MOCS Open held right after each expansion's release.[8]

The traditional MOCS qualifiers has three stages:

  1. Earning Qualifier Points. Players earn points by playing in selected regular events such as Leagues. Or given on a monthly basis if a player has SIlver level or above in Pro Players Club and/or in Hall of Fame (15 QPs for Non-HoF Silver Pros and 35 QPs for the rest). QPs are not confined to a specific month, meaning that players can earn points over several months in order to play in a MOCS event.
  2. MOCS Monthly Event. These cost 35 QPs to enter (or if they only have 15-34 QPs, winning the last chance qualifier that costs 15 QPs to enter), are held roughly twice every month (one Constructed and one Limited), and all players achieving a 6-2 or better record are invited to the MOCS Playoff Event.
  3. MOCS Playoff Event. An invitation-only event where only players qualified via the respective Monthly Events are invited. The top two players are invited to the Magic Online Championship as well as the next Pro Tour.

In 2017, two MOCS Open tournaments were held right after each expansion's release. The format was Limited of the respective set, and winner of each MOCS Open was invited to the Magic Online Championship as well as the next Pro Tour. Unlike traditional Monthly Events, MOCS Opens do not require any QPs in order to participate.

Additionally, the previous year's Magic Online Championship winner is invited; the rest of the slots are awarded as "At-large slots" to the top players on the MOCS Yearly Leaderboard (the players with the most leaderboard points that year) until the Magic Online Championship has 24 players. Players invited via At-large slot will also receive invitations to the Pro Tour following the Magic Online Championship event.

Format

The Magic Online Championship is a multi-day format featuring multiple different formats. The formats vary each year, but each event features at least one Constructed format and at least one Limited format.

For example, the 2015 Magic Online Championship (held in 2016) used the following schedule:

  • Day 1:
  • Day 2:
  • Day 3 (featuring the top four players after 14 rounds of Swiss play):
    • Semifinals and finals were played as best-of-three-matches (each being best-of-three-games) featuring three different formats (Legacy, Standard, Modern); the top seeded player would choose which format to play first, the other player chose which format to play in the second match, and the third match, if necessary, would be whichever format had not yet been played.

Prizes

The prize payout is, as of 2019, $250,000, distributed as follows:

Place Payout
1 $50,000
2 $30,000
3–4 $15,000
5–8 $10,000
9–16 $7,500
17–24 $5,000

Before 2019, the winner would also earn Platinum status in the Pro Players Club.

Magic Online Championships

2009 Magic Online Championship

19–22 November 2009 in Rome, Italy.

Place Player Magic Online username Prize
1 {FIN} Anssi Myllymäki Anathik $13,000
2 {JPN} Shota Yasooka yaya3 $9,000
3 {SVK} Robert Jurkovic jurda $6,000
4 {URY} Federico Rivero CharToYourFace $6,000

2010 Magic Online Championship

9–12 December 2010 in Chiba, Japan.

Place Player Magic Online username Prize
1 {BRA} Carlos Romão Jabs $25,000
2 {JPN} Akira Asahara Archer. $17,000
3 {USA} Logan Nettles Jaberwocki $9,000
4 {USA} Brad Nelson FFfreaK $9,000

2011 Magic Online Championship

17–20 November 2011 in San Francisco, California, United States.

Place Player Magic Online username Prize
1 {USA} Reid Duke reiderrabbit $25,000
2 {DEU} Florian Pils flying man $17,000
3 {USA} Andrew Cuneo Gainsay $9,000
4 {CAN} David Caplan goobafish $9,000

2012 Magic Online Championship

22–23 March 2013 in Chicago, Illinois, United States.

Place Player Magic Online username Prize
1 {RUS} Dmitriy Butakov Butakov $25,000
2 {DNK} Malte Holm Malteko $17,000
3 {SWE} Andreas Eklund Eken. $9,000
4 {USA} Sam Pardee Smdster $9,000

2013 Magic Online Championship

28–30 March 2014 in Seattle, Washington, United States.

Place Player Prize
1 {DNK} Lars Dam $25,000
2 {USA} Cory Lack $17,000
3 {HUN} Tamas Glied $9,000
4 {RUS} Dmitriy Butakov $9,000

2014 Magic Online Championship

15–17 May 2015 in Seattle, Washington, United States.

Place Player Prize
1 {SWE} Magnus Lantto $25,000
2 {NLD} Jasper de Jong $17,000
3 {SRB} Aleksa Telarov $9,000
4 {ESP} Antonio Del Moral León $9,000

2015 Magic Online Championship

13–15 May 2016 in Seattle, Washington, United States.

Place Player Prize
1 {NLD} Niels Noorlander $25,000
2 {RUS} Alexander Ivanov $17,000
3 {DEU} Jonathan Anghelescu $9,000
4 {USA} Gerry Thompson $9,000

2016 Magic Online Championship

3–5 March 2017 in Seattle, Washington, United States.[9]

Place Player Prize
1 {USA} Josh Utter-Leyton $25,000
2 {CZE} Lukas Blohon $17,000
3 {JPN} Ryosuke Urase $9,000
4 {PRT} Marcio Carvalho $9,000

2017 Magic Online Championship

2–4 March 2018 in Seattle, Washington, United States.[10]

Place Player Prize
1 {RUS} Dmitriy Butakov $40,000
2 {USA} Steve Rubin $20,000
3 {SWE} Niklas Dahlquist $10,000
4 {DNK} Lars Dam $10,000

2018 Magic Online Championship

17-19 May 2019 in Seattle, Washington, United States.[11]

Place Player Prize
1 {ITA} Mattia Oneto $40,000
2 {USA} Kenji Egashira $20,000
3 {PRT} Marcio Carvalho $10,000
4 {PRT} Beernado Torres $10,000

2019 Magic Online Championship

Early 2020 in Seattle, Washington, USA.[12]

References

  1. a b Chris Kiritz (December 5, 2019). "Introducing the New Magic Online Premier Play Program". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  2. Mike Gills (2009-03-10). "Magic Online 2009 Championship Series". Wizards of the Coast. Retrieved on 2016-05-16.
  3. SHOTA YASOOKA. Wizards of the Coast. Retrieved on 2016-05-16.
  4. MAGIC ONLINE 2009 CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES. Wizards of the Coast. Retrieved on 2016-05-16.
  5. Brian David-Marshall (2010-11-19). "Meet the December Twelve". Wizards of the Coast. Retrieved on 2016-05-16.
  6. 2012 MAGIC ONLINE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES. Wizards of the Coast. Retrieved on 2016-05-16.
  7. BUTAKOV TRAMPLES HIS WAY PAST THE OPPOSITION!. Wizards of the Coast. Retrieved on 2016-05-16.
  8. 2017 MAGIC ONLINE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES. Retrieved on 2016-10-20.
  9. Event coverage
  10. Event coverage
  11. Event coverage
  12. Wizards of the Coast (December 8, 2019). "2019 Magic Online Championship Series". Magicthegathering.com.
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